I attend a lot of technical conferences, hackathons, workshops and all sorts of events where I get loaded up with t-shirts. Ridiculous amounts of t-shirts. Generally I love this! I have had a basic standard about all of these t-shirts. If it is a company and product that I know has done well by its users, by the community and the people involved have tried to do good by what they’re advocating, I’ll wear the t-shirt. Thus, I have a lot of tech t-shirts to wear.

However…

American Apparel is one of the top suppliers of t-shirts for tech companies to print their stuff on and bring to trade shows, hackathons or wherever they’re going. American Apparel definitely has some positive attributes, here’s a list:

the products for the USA are made in the USA.

the workers make almost 2x as much as other factory workers in the surrounding areas (Los Angeles)

paid time off

sick leave

health care

company-subsidized lunches

bus passes

free English as an additional language classes

on-site massage therapists

free bicycles

on-site bike mechanics

free parking

proper lighting and ventilation

Now some of these things, many, to the tech industry seem like a joke. But these are very serious benefits for labor. In general, American Apparel does good by it’s employees. At least, in the United States.

The Problems

In China they do not hold these same standards, they hold the standards of labor practices in China for Chinese Factories. These are, dramatically lower than standards in factories in the United States. The conditions there are harsh, but there is no shortage of labor and it is considered an honor to get work. It’s a perverse irony, but it exists.

Then there is the problem that American Apparel has with sexism. There ads have obvious double standards in so many places. In England they’ve actually managed to get some ads banned. That’s an accomplishment since the English and Europeans are often far more liberal about things than US Citizens are. Namely, we as a population in the US are prudes by comparison, so if it got banned in England, holy moly I’m sure it would have raised absolute hell in the United States.

Pointing to an article on the double standards of American Apparel. I’m all about stepping back and buying product, that has all the above positives in the company and has higher integrity in marketing than American Apparel, but what are the choices? That’s where another tweet a few minute later rallying several other fellow technical evangelists to stop using American Apparel as the top t-shirt.

More Thoughts

This leads me to another thought too, why hand out throwaway t-shirts in the first place? Why hand out anything that’s throw away? Why not hold ourselves to even higher standards? Why not only give away things that people will keep and really use. I can’t imagine how many t-shirts people take and then throw away. We as an industry should absolutely do better.

Some of the things that @thoward37 and I often do is haul excess cloths down to the local Goodwill or Homeless Shelter. Notice how cold it is right now in parts of the country? People are dying (nope, not exaggerating) right now from the cold. Because they don’t have blankets, shelter space and other simple amenities. The least we as an industry could do is provide our excess to those most in need so they can at least stay alive!

Solutions (These are NSFW)

Organize efforts at conferences to call-out companies that are being sexist, racist or otherwise discriminatory. Do it was a conference, as a group, as a whole and make it count. Our industry actually gives a shit and we can make things happen. Don’t pretend we can’t.

Pull your head out of your ass if you think that buying t-shirts from some sweat shop from X company is a good idea. Do better, if your company doesn’t have the money to buy good product, the DON’T BUY PRODUCT.

When you provide swag or whatever to conference goers, treat the conference attendees with respect and actually get them something they can use, that they’ll be happy to say, “yeah, I got this at X conference, it so rocked in so many ways!”

Think outside the box, do we really need another thousand t-shirts floating around? If we do have them floating around are you really going to be able to give them away? To people that will wear them? Just think about these things a little. Every single technical evangelist I know is smart enough this takes about 2 seconds. So just spend that 2 seconds and help out.

Also, there are more and more women getting involved in tech, in spite of the trolls that waste so much of all our time. Think about this when you’re ordering products, don’t just get a bunch of giant t-shirts. Sure, get some, but realize the community is quickly diversifying and many if not most of the community that is stepping up to take leadership of the tech industry is not going to be one size fits all anymore. (thank goodness)

Last one is simple. Just stop and think about what would matter to people. What do you want to give to others that would actually matter. I mean, it really boils down to basic GOOD, high integrity marketing. Don’t treat people like shit, treat them like they’re important. They’re prospective customers, they pay money and put food on your table. So just simply, easily, give a shit. 🙂

On this same topic, I’ll have another post soon about what you’d like to see at Node PDX for swag. What in general would you find to be excellent swag to receive at a conference that you’d be proud to lug home and wear, use or otherwise not throw it away? Until then, please comment and we’ll get some round table conversation going.

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Lean, Kanban, Agile Pairing, TDD (sometimes test after) software architect and programmer. Worked with distributed (called cloud sometimes) computing services since 2007 using phat data (8 billion rows of data on an AVERAGE day, sometimes called big data) and everything from business intelligence to the nitty gritty of array structures inside file based data stores to create caching tiers for custom software needs.
Currently pushing for distributed technologies & improving software architecture, better data centers, the best software development practices and keeping everything secure in the financial industry again.
To see what I'm up to today, check out my blog at Composite Code.

One response to “Sexism, Racism and t-shirts… Why Stop There?”

The lesson in this article is that, we as the consumers must be articulate when it comes to buying certain items made in the local market. Though brand goods are much nicer though its expensive. We can still get a quality items in cheaper cost, window shopping is a nice way to see and check things before you actually buy the products.event t-shirts